New Report Takes Aim at Gehry's Eisenhower Memorial

Martin C. Pedersen

Courtesy Gehry Partners

Frank Gehry’s embattled design for the proposed Eisenhower Memorial got even more embattled this past week with the release of a a 58-page report drafted by the House Natural Resources Committee. New York Times reporter Robin Pogrebin, among several others, quickly parsed through the report's claims to paint a bleak picture of the design's future.

There is no question that the Gehry design is imperiled. For the past two years, Congress has failed to approve funds for the memorial’s construction, and that’s not likely to change in the upcoming budget. But I thought there were a few glaring omissions in Pogrebin's story. The report was not exactly sanctioned and approved by the committee. In fact, the Washington Postreported that not a single member of the committee signed on to it. According to one of my sources in D.C., the document is the work of a single staffer. A subcommittee staffer, on what’s called in Washington a “B committee.” If you read the Times account, you would have been led to the incorrect conclusion that the House Committee had called the Gehry design a “five-star folly.” No, a subcomittee staffer with a clear ideological agenda crafted that epithet.

Later in the piece, Pogrebin quotes Justin Shubow, president of the National Civic Art Society in Washington, and Sam Roche, a spokesman for Right by Ike: Project for a New Eisenhower Memorial. Shubow has been waging a one-man war against the design since the outset. Both Roche and Shubow have been funded in this public relations effort by Richard Driehaus, the Chicago businessman who underwrites the Driehaus Prize for classical architecture. (See a pattern here?) Carol Ross Joynt, writing in the May issue of Washingtonian magazine, has penned the definitive account of the whole sorry matter.

Even the one solid piece of news in the Pogrebin story was somewhat incomplete in its telling. She reported that the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC) in April voted 7-3 against approving the Gehry design. This is true, as far as it goes. But according to another Washington source I contacted, the result of the meeting found Gehry—who has demonstrated almost biblical patient throughout—agreeing to rework the scheme yet again. Granted, given the fierce nature of the opposition, that might be impossible, but it was the ultimate outcome of the NCPC meeting in April.

What was especially frustrating about the Times piece was its utter failure to at least acknowledge the nature of much of the opposition. Yes, there’s been smart criticism lodged against the Gehry design. And all of that is a legitimate part of the discourse. But much of the opposition has been highly organized and funded by groups engaged in a culture war. That this whole episode sadly mirrors the larger paralysis gripping Washington should come as no surprise, since it’s coming virtually from the same place: the American Right Wing, Culture Division.

How exactly has Shubow been waging a one-man war, if Sam Roche and Driehaus are involved, not to mention Congress, the Eisenhower grandchildren and a slew of American citizens who are unhappy with this memorial? What poor reporting?

The design will cost taxpayers millions a year just to maintain. And no one, that I am aware of, has compared those maintenance costs with maintenance costs of existing memorials. The whole process, design and committee, has been fiscally and ethically irresponsible from the get go, and Congress is now calling them on it.

Aug 6, 2014 09:33 am

Posted by
josh

Unfortunately, this article, full of unnamed sources, fails to recognize that the criticism is not only about Gehry's design. After so many years, it is impossible to divorce the memorial design, the selection process, and the commission's financial mismanagement from one another.

Why does the design still not satisfy the NCPC's design requirements, which were spelled out in 2006, and what reworking and at what cost will this be done? Why did the commission deviate from the GSA's Design Excellence Program requirements when selecting Gehry? How can the commission have spent so much money yet still not have an approved design?

What amount of time and what taxpayer cost does the author believe this particular memorial design is worth?

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